4.8 Article

One-step synthesis of sequence-controlled multiblock polymers with up to 11 segments from monomer mixture

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-27830-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [19H02769]
  2. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology of Japan [18H04639, 20H04798]
  3. Frontier Chemistry Center (Hokkaido University)
  4. Photo-excitonic Project (Hokkaido University)
  5. Science and Technology Research Program of Chongqing Municipal Education Commission [KJQN201801116, KJQN201901109]
  6. Cultivation Plan of National Natural Science Foundation of China and Social Science Foundation Project [2021PYZ03]
  7. Innovation Research Group at Institutions of Higher Education in Chongqing [CXQT19027]
  8. China Scholarship Council [201908500030]

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In this study, a self-switchable polymerization method using alkali metal carboxylate catalysts is reported for the direct synthesis of multiblock polymers with multiple segments. The method allows the production of polymers with complex sequences and structures, offering potential opportunities for material design.
Switchable polymerization holds considerable potential for the synthesis of highly sequence-controlled multiblock. To date, this method has been limited to three-component systems, which enables the straightforward synthesis of multiblock polymers with less than five blocks. Herein, we report a self-switchable polymerization enabled by simple alkali metal carboxylate catalysts that directly polymerize six-component mixtures into multiblock polymers consisting of up to 11 blocks. Without an external trigger, the catalyst polymerization spontaneously connects five catalytic cycles in an orderly manner, involving four anhydride/epoxide ring-opening copolymerizations and one L-lactide ring-opening polymerization, creating a one-step synthetic pathway. Following this autotandem catalysis, reasonable combinations of different catalytic cycles allow the direct preparation of diverse, sequence-controlled, multiblock copolymers even containing various hyperbranched architectures. This method shows considerable promise in the synthesis of sequentially and architecturally complex polymers, with high monomer sequence control that provides the potential for designing materials.

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